The Last Summer
A Novel
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- $16.99
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
A classic love story, The Last Summer chronicles a young man on the verge of growing up and an older woman running away from a life out of control.
It is the summer of 1968: The world is poised on the cusp of radical change. Politicians question the status quo, blacks react to decades of oppression, and students protest the injustices of war. Change is in the air, too, for 37-year-old single mother Claire Malek. She has just walked out on her rather cushy job in Washington, DC, as "special assistant" to Senator Bob Mallory. DC had become an impossible place for Claire, heavy with regrets and burdened with secrets she knew she could never divulge. Anxious for both escape and change, Claire packs her 15-year-old daughter, April, into her Camaro and heads to a small town on Cape Cod, where Claire takes a job as cub reporter on a twice-weekly newspaper called the Covenant. She knows it's a big risk, but Claire is desperate for a new start and a new life, and the town and all it has to offer seem to be a good beginning.
For Lane Hillman, son of the publisher of the Covenant, change is just beyond the horizon. Twenty-two years old and fresh out of Harvard, he's come home to celebrate the last summer of his youth and one final season as a reporter on his father's newspaper. In an effort to avoid the draft, and possible service in Vietnam, Lane has enlisted in VISTA -- the America-based Peace Corps -- and in the fall will begin a four-year stint working in the inner city of Detroit.
Claire's first day on the job is the same day Robert Kennedy is shot. Racial tensions around the country continue to erupt into violence and confrontation. But in a few days another more personal tragedy strikes the town as a young girl is found murdered -- the first such death there in more than twenty years -- and on the same day a teenage boy is found drowned under suspicious circumstances.
As Claire and Lane work together to try to make sense of the seemingly unrelated deaths, a closeness grows between them, and with it, the stirrings of sexual attraction. At first Claire resists, knowing that the fifteen years separating them is an unbridgeable gap, but before either of them realizes what's happening, she and Lane are swept up in a romantic passion that threatens to overwhelm them both.
As the summer progresses, so does their affair, and soon the whole town knows about it, including Lane's parents, who are not at all pleased with this turn of events, and April, Claire's daughter, who feels both awe and resentment at the changes the affair brings in her mother.
Before the summer ends, however, Claire and Lane will have to contend with more than the opinions of family and townsfolk. A shadowy figure responsible for the death of the young woman begins to fixate on someone new -- and the lovers find themselves in a race to save their own lives.
A work of great tenderness, taut suspense, and historical immediacy, The Last Summer is a captivating portrait of love and sacrifice.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A beautiful woman jumps from Washington politics into a Cape Cod murder investigation in Hough's latest, which begins in 1968 when 39-year-old Claire Maleck suddenly walks out on her secretarial job for a prominent senator after her affair with him puts her on the short end of a criminal coverup. With her 14-year-old daughter in tow, Claire takes a brief but difficult hiatus with her mother in Cambridge, then heads off on a whimsical day trip to Cape Cod, where she gets herself hired as a neophyte reporter for a smalltown paper called the Covenant. Once she learns the ropes, Claire finds herself attracted to the editor's son, Lane Hillman, a precocious college student who spends his summers developing his formidable talent as a writer and reporter. The two quickly become a couple after they pair up to begin covering stories, but they get more than they bargained for when a double murder lands them in the middle of a setup by the local police chief, Paul Williams, a corrupt womanizer who sets his sights on Claire. Hough's talent for characterization and succinct, crisp dialogue serves him well in the early going, although the climax in which Williams lures Claire down a remote Cape Cod road begs for some meatier prose, and elements of the plot seem predictable and familiar. Hough (A Two-Car Funeral) easily integrates the historical events of 1968 Bobby Kennedy's murder, the Democratic Convention in Chicago and his eye and ear for the rhythms of smalltown seaside life help bring the problematic romance between Lane and Claire to life. His ability to balance compassion with an understanding of moral complexity adds substance to the narrative and elevates this book above the standard murder mystery cum love story.